Amid a declaration by the United Nations that the transatlantic slave trade ranks among the gravest crimes in human history, Caribbean reparations advocates are renewing calls for justice, even as a controversial response emerges from the UK’s political fringe.
Nigel Farage’s right-wing Reform UK has proposed imposing visa restrictions on nationals from countries that continue to press the United Kingdom for reparations over its historical role in the slave trade.
The party argued that such demands are “divisive and counterproductive,” adding in a recent interview: “If governments choose to pursue policies that unfairly target Britain for historical grievances, we should reconsider the privileges we extend — including visa access.”
The proposal has drawn strong criticism from Caribbean leaders and reparations campaigners, who say it reflects growing resistance in parts of the UK to confronting its colonial past. Advocacy groups across the region, including those aligned with the CARICOM Reparations Commission, have intensified calls for compensation, formal apologies, and development support tied to the enduring impacts of slavery.
Economists and historians have long debated the scale of potential reparations, with some estimates suggesting the United Kingdom’s liability could exceed £18 trillion when accounting for the economic gains derived from slavery and the long-term damage inflicted on enslaved Africans and their descendants.
The renewed push comes after the UN reaffirmed the transatlantic slave trade as a crime of unparalleled magnitude, a characterization campaigners say strengthens the moral and historical case for reparatory justice.
However, Farage’s position reflects a broader strand of opinion within parts of UK society that rejects financial reparations, arguing instead for forward-looking partnerships rather than what they describe as punitive historical accounting.

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